Sunday, 21 Sep 2025

ICE rips Pritzker for 'siding with criminal illegal alien' after officer dragged, suspect shot dead

ICE pushes back after Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker accused the agency of lacking transparency in a deadly encounter where a migrant dragged an officer before being shot dead.


ICE rips Pritzker for 'siding with criminal illegal alien' after officer dragged, suspect shot dead
1.6 k views

ICE Deputy Director Madison Sheahan pushed back on Pritzker's comments, accusing Democrats of siding with illegal migrants over law enforcement.

"They obviously continue to take the sides of these criminal illegal aliens who put our people in harm's way," said Sheahan Tuesday on "Fox & Friends."

"Not just officers, it's the people of Chicago, people of these communities that these Democrats and Governor Pritzker continue to choose to protect."

When officers tried to detain him, he allegedly drove toward them, striking and dragging one agent. The officer then opened fire. Villegas-Gonzalez was taken to a hospital where he later died. 

Sheahan said the ICE agent was put "in critical condition," but has since returned home. 

On Monday, Pritzker said he has requested more details about how the failed arrest unfolded, but has received few details.

"We need more information. We've asked ICE for all of the information around it. They have given very little," he said. 

"ICE is unwilling to provide the transparency that I think the American public and the public here deserves."

Sheahan rejected the governor's scrutiny. 

"It is under investigation and we're [going to] continue to make sure we are transparent. The claims that we're not is just false," she said. 

However, Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson have strongly resisted the operation. 

Earlier this month, Johnson wrote on X: "Chicago doesn't want to see reckless, unconstitutional, militarized immigration enforcement in our city."

Sheahan has noted that anti-ICE rhetoric makes officers' jobs more dangerous. 

"We're already at over a thousand percent increase year over year of the dangers that our officers are in because of the rhetoric that we're seeing online, the dangers of what elected officials continue to say," she said. 

Despite the pushback, Sheahan said ICE will continue its mission with the backing from the White House.  

"Law enforcement officers overwhelmingly want to work with ICE to keep their [communities] safe," she said.

you may also like

Inside United Airlines' nerve center: How thousands of flights stay on track every day
  • by foxnews
  • descember 09, 2016
Inside United Airlines' nerve center: How thousands of flights stay on track every day

United Airlines' 24/7 Network Operations Center near Chicago has more than 2,000 employees across 26 departments who manage nearly 5,000 flights a day worldwide.

read more